Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Bradbury's New Blog Explores Wallpaper's Storied History

Guild member Steve Bauer of Bradbury and Bradbury Art Wallpapers has been getting noticed for his splendid blog, which is shaping up nicely into a resource for wallpaper historians and enthusiasts of period design.

Many wallpapers have wonderful stories. Stories with questions. Hard questions. Questions like "Have you ever thought seriously about the use of medieval monks as the central design motif for your Arts & Crafts dining room??"


William Campbell Wall Paper Co., circa 1912

One recent entry highlights the Western themed papers popular in the 1950's:

Cowboy 2
(pretty sure this one matched my brother's PJs.)

Have a look at Bradbury&Bradbury "the Blog" here: http://bradbury.com/blog/ for more wallpaper tales, and inspiration, too!

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Sunday, July 26, 2009

Chris Yerke shares his old house expertise on SFGTV


Guild member Chris Yerke recently discovered that a television program in which he participated is now available as streaming video on the San Francisco Government TV website. Filmed in 2006, the program was filmed as part of the San Francisco Building Department's brown bag lunch series, and aired on San Francisco cable channel 26. The program features contractor Chris Yerke, CEO of Restoration Workshop, Ltd. and carpenter James "Tools" Gauvin of Matarozzi Pelsinger in a panel discussion of old house issues.

This one hour program visits the thorny issues like weatherizing period homes, replacing windows, finding period house advice and craftspeople, and finding appropriate materials and hardware. It can be viewed by visiting the SFGTV.gov site, and scroll down the list of programs and select "This Old House."

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Saturday, June 20, 2009

Jane Powell at "Bathonista"


A whole blog dedicated to bathrooms? why yes, it's iBath.com's aptly named Bathonista, where this month author and reigning guild president Jane Powell answers five questions about early 20th century bath design.


"This is absolutely the best time for restoring or reproducing a bungalow-style bathroom, as both vintage pieces and great reproductions are available for all the various bathroom parts."
- Jane Powell

Everything you need to know about bungalow bathrooms can be found in Jane Powell's book, Bungalow Bathrooms, which is due to be released in paperback this August.

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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

New Life for Oakland Cathedral's historic artwork

Artistic License members salvage historic elements for Oakland's new Cathedral of Christ the Light


<--St.Simon, stained glass from the Cathedral St. Francis de Sales, restored by Reflection Studios


Prior to the demolition of Oakland's former cathedral, Saint Francis de Sales, Allen Dragge's Reflection Studios was hired to safely remove all the stained glass windows. CMA Conversion Management Associates, worked on behalf of architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill to facilitate the restoration and installation of historic architectural elements in the new building. The stained glass panels have now been reinstalled in the mausoleum of the new cathedral, each one backlit and surrounded by a field of translucent onyx.

Reflection Studios also salvaged a sculptural ceramic mural which had been mounted on the wall at St. Francis de Sales. This ceramic panel resided in storage crates from 1993 until 2008. CMA contracted with guild members Diane Winters and Riley Doty to restore and install this colorful piece of ceramic art. It consists of thirty pieces, many sculpted in high relief and weighing as much as fifty pounds. Some pieces suffered damage from the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and from the removal process. (One section repaired by Diane had been broken into fourteen separate pieces!)

Diane Winters working on repairs to the tile mural

This artwork dates from 1962, executed by the Rambusch firm, commissioned for installation at St. Francis de Sales at the time of its consecration as the cathedral for the diocese of Oakland. The artwork seems to express that time in history, immediately following Vatican II. Several historic changes were initiated then, including saying Mass in many native languages instead of universally in Latin. The spirit of reaching out to diverse cultures seems reflected in this ceramic piece, which features traditionally executed scenes from the life of St. Francis de Sales, but with background patterns that suggests ethnic arts such as weaving or basketry. As a whole this lovely piece truly is a relic of the church's history, even though its origin is relatively recent in the larger scheme of things.

Riley Doty, working on repairs to the tile mural

In its original configuration the entire piece measured 10.5 feet high and over 5 feet wide. When Doty and Winters laid out the mural "dry" on the floor of the storage warehouse the architects from SOM were initially disappointed to observe these dimensions because the space they had in mind for it had a nine foot ceiling. SOM, working with Father Paul Minnihan from the cathedral, developed a wonderful solution to this problem. The restored mural was installed as a relic, with the main body attached to a specially constructed backing which hangs a few inches away from the back wall. The remaining sections sit adjacent, artfully placed on podiums, and the whole makes up a lovely composition.


Restored tile mural fragments, displayed in the new cathedral.

This composition is displayed as part of the Donor Wall. Both this and the stained glass in the mausoleum reside on the ground level, one floor below the cathedral. A visit to the sanctuary above is a must-see for first time visitors. The space created by architect Craig Hartman of SOM is breathtakingly beautiful and at the same time calm and serene.

--- Riley Doty

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Friday, December 26, 2008

The Best Decorative Painting in the Bay Area





This week the results of the local competition "The bAy List" featuring the best of the San Francisco Bay Area were announced at sfgate.com

Our own Adrian Card won First Place, with 33 glowing reviews of his work posted by clients and fans of his work.
Second Place in this competition was awarded to fellow guild member, muralist Lynne Rutter.

You can see even more of Adrian's work on his newly redesigned website at adriancard.com.

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Sunday, November 23, 2008

AL members featured in Old House Interiors

Cover Story!

Check out the December 2008 issue of Old House Interiors on newstands now, which features the work of a number of Artistic License artisans.

In this cover illustration the art glass windows by Theodore Ellison, fireplace tilework designed by Paul Duchscherer, tiles made by Diane Winters, tilework installed by Riley Doty.
Elsewhere in this same house are built-ins and furniture designed and built by Debey Zito, and interior painting by Robert Dufort of Magic Brush.

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Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Children's Mural at Burlingame Public Library

Muralist Lynne Rutter's recently completed major commission for the Burlingame Public Library.

The Burlingame Library is a charming Spanish Revival style building, designed by architect E. L. Norberg and completed in 1931.
The storybook mural was commissioned by the Burlingame Library Foundation to commemorate the centennial celebration of the Library. The Children's Wing is a large space with soaring, beamed ceilings, textured plaster walls, and a lot of odd angles. This presented a challenge as there is no one focal point to the room, nor is there an uninterrupted space where one might normally site a mural.

Design consultant and guild member Michelle Nelson brought Lynne Rutter into the project to create a site-specific work that would incorporated the room's architecture. In Rutter's design, the grates, arches, and doors were integrated into the painting, so that the architecture became part of the composition of the mural.
Faraway Castles, approx. 9 feet wide
"The room becomes a story; its walls the pages of a favorite book."

The Burlingame Library is located at 480 Primrose, Burlingame. It's a wonderful building well-supported and well-used by its community, and a well worth a visit from you.

above: The north wall mural with life size-figures was painted on canvas and finished after installation on site. photos by Lynne Rutter.

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Amazing baths in Old House Journal

Beautiful Bathrooms for the Period Home

Master tilesetter Riley Doty is featured in this well-illustrated article in Old House Journal.

"The bathroom in Becky Waring's 1906 Berkeley, California, brown-shingle cottage—a house some attribute to Julia Morgan—was dingy, with linoleum on the floor and unappealing 1970s white tile set in stained grout. "I wanted the bath to look as nice as the rest of the house, while maintaining historical authenticity," Becky explains. So she researched period bathrooms everywhere she could, and did extensive product scouting. "It didn't matter if the fixtures were cheap or pricey," she says. "They had to look right." She also found Riley Doty, a master tilesetter with the San Francisco-based restoration group Artistic License, to help guide her."



The WC in Becky Waring's circa 1906 bungalow, tiled by Riley Doty
photo from Old House Journal.

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Monday, October 20, 2008

Madonna della Guardia Rises from the Ashes

Guild members Phil Diers and Adrian Card restore a beloved sculpture

The Madonna della Guardia a treasured icon for three generations of Italian-American Catholics at Corpus Christi Parish, San Francisco, has been restored after a devastating fire. The sculpture was acquired by Corpus Christi Church in 1941, when a small group of church members traveled to Genoa, Italy, with the intention of procuring such a statue. The church brings it out once a year for the Feast of the Madonna della Guardia in late August.

In 2006 an arsonist broke into the church and doused the blanket-wrapped statue with gasoline and set in on fire. In the course of beating out the flames, the firemen inadvertently broke off lots of pieces such as arms, hands, and heads. Through a very circuitous route the church was finally able to connect with sculptor Phil Diers who has faithfully recreated all the missing pieces, sculpting several of them from scratch, relying on old photos of the statue for reference.
Decorative painter Adrian Card then used the old photos to repaint the statue to look the same as it did before the fire. He also restored the crown which is encrusted with 128 Swarovski crystals.
Matthias Gordon-Murer, a San Francisco-based woodworker built a hardwood plinth with concealed wheels for the statue which will make it easier to move around the church.

The Corpus Christi Church held a special mass and festival to celebrate the restoration on Saturday, October 18.

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Sunday, September 7, 2008

Bruce Aidell's Ultimate Craftsman


Sunday's San Francisco Chronicle Magazine features an article by Jane Powell about Bruce Aidell's Craftsman-style wine country home, designed in the manner of a Greene and Greene "ultimate bungalow" by Emeryville architect Greg Klein of John Malick and Associates.
Leaded Glass door detail, via www.jmalick.com

This marvelous house displays some amazing leaded glass work by current guild President Ted Ellison.
Bravo Mr. Aidell for this splendid effort, and to everyone who worked on this incredible house.

Read the article by Jane Powell here.
More about Charles Greene and Henry Greene here.


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Thursday, August 7, 2008

San Francisco Arts and Crafts Show



This Saturday and Sunday, August 9th and 10th, Debey Zito will be exhibiting at the San Francisco Arts and Crafts Show at the Concourse, 8th and Brannan. The show hours are 10-6 Saturday and 11-5 on Sunday.
Look for other Artistic License members there as well!

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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

New Restoration Workshop

A recent visit to the enormous new shop of Christopher L. Yerke's Restoration Workshop.

Restoration Workshop has recently moved into a huge new space in San Francisco
Mission District, where among other exciting projects, several talented carpenters and apprentices are hard at work rebuilding and restoring the redwood paneling and woodwork for an important historic San Francisco home that was damaged by fire.

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George Zaffle at the 2008 SALI Convention

Fans of Decorative Painting will surely want to catch George Zaffle's class at the 23rd annual convention of the Stencil Artisans League, Inc. being held this week in Charleston, NC.

George will be teaching a Decorative Painting Extravaganza as well as demystifying the World of Decorative Painting to eager students from across the country.

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Adrian Card featured in SF Chronicle


August, 2007

The San Francisco Chronicle ran a wonderful piece on the home of AL member Adrian Card and John Tinker. They've spent years rehabbing one of the oldest houses in San Francisco, with respect for its architecture, and its previous owners.
Lots of great pictures in that article as well.

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Monday, July 16, 2007

Erik Kramvik in the New York Times

July, 2007

Designer Erik Kramvik gets noticed in this article in the New York Times

"And even in houses that would seem to be all about the past, it’s possible to create a period bathroom that isn’t mired in it. Ingrid Weiss, a real estate agent who lives on Belvedere Island in San Francisco Bay, has just finished a two-year renovation that included the gutting and enlargement of the master bathroom in the 1892 Queen Anne-style house that she and her husband bought in 1978.

“It’s been the love of our lives and dear, dear friend,” she said of the house, which is considered a historic landmark on the island. But Ms. Weiss, working with Erik Kramvik, an architectural designer (he is part of a Bay Area collective called Artistic License, which brings together architects and artisans specializing in period restoration), set out to capture the essence of a Victorian bath without giving the room a kitschy bond to the era."

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Saturday, May 26, 2007

Green Envy by Jane Powell


May, 2007

"Green building is an oxymoron..." our own Jane Powell debunks the myth of green building. Read her article in the San Francisco Chronicle


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Thursday, April 26, 2007

2007 San Francisco Decorator Showcase

April, 2007

Lynne Rutter designed a Vintage Laundry Room for the 2007 San Francisco Decorator Showcase, open April 28 - May 28 at 2901 Broadway Street a spectacular 1927 neoclassical villa designed by architect Henry Clay Smith, in original period condition.

Several guild members contributed to the production of this room.

above photo by David Papas Photographer


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Friday, March 16, 2007

Berkeley Hillside Club

March, 2007
Dianne Ayres has been elected the President of the Berkeley Hillside Club.

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Thursday, April 6, 2006

Bruce Bradbury voted into AL Hall of Fame

This portrait of Bruce first appeared on the cover of SF Magazine in January, 1990.

Bruce Bradbury,
founder of Bradbury and Bradbury Art Wallpapers, and one of the founding members of Artistic License, retired from business in 2006. The members of the guild have unanimously elected him our inaugural Hall of Fame Member, so that Bruce could found yet another great Institution of Period Design.

Read more about Bruce and his accomplishments on our members page.



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